Biomechanical characterization and in vitro mechanical injury of elderly human femoral head cartilage:: comparison to adult bovine humeral head cartilage

被引:44
作者
Demarteau, O.
Pillet, L.
Inaebnit, A.
Borens, O.
Quinn, T. M.
机构
[1] Ecole Polytech Fed Lausanne, Cartilage Biomech Grp, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
[2] CHU Vaudois, Lausanne, Switzerland
关键词
human; articular cartilage; biomechanical properties; mechanical injury;
D O I
10.1016/j.joca.2005.12.011
中图分类号
R826.8 [整形外科学]; R782.2 [口腔颌面部整形外科学]; R726.2 [小儿整形外科学]; R62 [整形外科学(修复外科学)];
学科分类号
摘要
Objectives: In vitro mechanical injury of articular cartilage is useful to identify events associated with development of post-traumatic osteoarthritis (OA). To date, many in vitro injury models have used animal cartilage despite the greater clinical relevance of human cartilage. We aimed to characterize a new in vitro injury model using elderly human femoral head cartilage and compare its behavior to that of an existing model with adult bovine humeral head cartilage. Design: Mechanical properties of human and bovine cartilage disks were characterized by elastic modulus and hydraulic permeability in radially confined axial compression, and by Young's modulus, Poisson's ratio, and direction-dependent radial strain in unconfined compression. Biochemical composition was assessed in terms of tissue water, solid, and glycosaminoglycan (GAG) contents. Responses to mechanical injury were assessed by observation of macroscopic superficial tissue cracks and histological measurements of cell viability following single injurious ramp loads at 7 or 70%/s strain rate to 3 or 14 MPa peak stress. Results: Confined compression moduli and Young's moduli were greater in elderly human femoral cartilage vs adult bovine humeral cartilage whereas hydraulic permeability was less. Radial deformations of axially compressed explant disks were more anisotropic (direction-dependent) for the human cartilage. In both cartilage sources, tissue cracking and associated cell death during injurious loading was common for 14 MPa peak stress at both strain rates. Conclusion: Despite differences in mechanical properties, acute damage induced by injurious loading was similar in both elderly human femoral cartilage and adult bovine humeral cartilage, supporting the clinical relevance of animal-based cartilage injury models. However, inherent structural differences such as cell density may influence subsequent cell-mediated responses to injurious loading and affect the development of OA. (c) 2006 OsteoArthritis Research Society International. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:589 / 596
页数:8
相关论文
共 41 条
[1]   TENSILE PROPERTIES OF HUMAN KNEE-JOINT CARTILAGE .1. INFLUENCE OF IONIC CONDITIONS, WEIGHT BEARING, AND FIBRILLATION ON THE TENSILE MODULUS [J].
AKIZUKI, S ;
MOW, VC ;
MULLER, F ;
PITA, JC ;
HOWELL, DS ;
MANICOURT, DH .
JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, 1986, 4 (04) :379-392
[2]  
[Anonymous], 1997, CLIN ORTHOP RELAT R, DOI DOI 10.1097/00003086-199709000-00033
[3]   VARIATIONS IN THE INTRINSIC MECHANICAL PROTERTIES OF HUMAN ARTICULAR-CARTILAGE WITH AGE, DEGENERATION, AND WATER-CONTENT [J].
ARMSTRONG, CG ;
MOW, VC .
JOURNAL OF BONE AND JOINT SURGERY-AMERICAN VOLUME, 1982, 64 (01) :88-94
[4]  
ATHANASIOU KA, 1995, CLIN ORTHOP RELAT R, P254
[5]   Age-related changes in the synthesis of link protein and aggrecan in human articular cartilage: implications for aggregate stability [J].
Bolton, MC ;
Dudhia, J ;
Bayliss, MT .
BIOCHEMICAL JOURNAL, 1999, 337 :77-82
[6]  
Boschetti F, 2004, BIORHEOLOGY, V41, P159
[7]   Nonlinear tensile properties of bovine articular cartilage and their variation with age and depth [J].
Charlebois, M ;
McKee, MD ;
Buschmann, MD .
JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICAL ENGINEERING-TRANSACTIONS OF THE ASME, 2004, 126 (02) :129-137
[8]   Time, stress, and location dependent chondrocyte death and collagen damage in cyclically loaded articular cartilage [J].
Chen, CT ;
Bhargava, M ;
Lin, PM ;
Torzilli, PA .
JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, 2003, 21 (05) :888-898
[9]   Chondrocyte necrosis and apoptosis in impact damaged articular cartilage [J].
Chen, CT ;
Burton-Wurster, N ;
Borden, C ;
Hueffer, K ;
Bloom, SE ;
Lust, G .
JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH, 2001, 19 (04) :703-711
[10]   Depth-dependent compressive properties of normal aged human femoral head articular cartilage: relationship to fixed charge density [J].
Chen, SS ;
Falcovitz, YH ;
Schneiderman, R ;
Maroudas, A ;
Sah, RL .
OSTEOARTHRITIS AND CARTILAGE, 2001, 9 (06) :561-569